Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2014 Yamaha Fuel Injection Gas Cart / 11.4 Hp Yamaha Engine on 2040-motos

$7,995
YearYear:0 MileageMileage:0
Location:

Kingsland, Georgia

Kingsland, GA
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Yamaha Other description

GOLF CART WHOLESALE OUTLET 912-729-XXXX Check out my other items NEW YAMAHA FUEL INJECTED GAS CART / WHITE 11.4 HORSEPOWER YAMAHA ENGINE SPECIFICATIONS: FACTORY NEW WHITE BODY FACTORY FOLDING REAR SEAT KIT 20" DESERT FOX TIRES! 80" WHITE ROOF NEW HEADLAMPS/TAILLIGHTS SAND COLORED SEAT COVERS FRONT STEEL BRUSH GUARD FENDER FLARE SET FRONT AND REAR HORN four year LIMITED WARRANTY Many other options available at your request! Wholesale Prices Available For Plantations and Dealers! Dealers Welcome! (912) 729-XXXX VISIT GCWO.COM Conveniently Located Off Exit three of Interstate 95

Moto blog

Pro Racing Heading To The West Coast After All

Tue, 04 Mar 2014

A Pro-Am style, three-round professional motorcycle racing series is set to debut in 2014, run in conjunction with AFM, America’s oldest club racing organization. This according to a press release from Sonoma Raceway, which will also be hosting the first stop of the three-round series, May 3-4. Hosted and sanctioned by AFM, a full field of Pro Superbike and Pro Sportbike professional riders and teams are expected to compete in the event.

Colin Edwards Joins Forward Racing CRT Squad for 2012

Fri, 02 Sep 2011

Colin Edwards will join the Forward Racing team to compete in the 2012 MotoGP season as a Claiming Rule Team entry. Edwards, known as a good development rider and an even better quote machine, is the first rider to officially sign on with a CRT. Forward Racing may be more familiar to some race fans by its former name, Hayate Racing, the outfit that ran the Kawasaki ZX-RR with Marco Melandri in 2009 after Kawasaki pulled out of MotoGP racing.

2024 Yamaha Tracer 9 GT+ Review

Thu, 17 Aug 2023

Riding 950 miles across three states in two days highlights this Tracer’s capabilities Photography by Joseph Augustin New motorcycle model introductions follow a well-worn path: travel to the event location, eat nice meals, get briefed on the bike of the moment, ride a route designed to highlight the bike’s strengths, take photos/video, eat more good food, return home, and write up a review. After 27 years in this industry, I still get a cheap thrill about throwing a leg over a new motorcycle before it is available to the general public. However, what really gets me going is when I have a chance to log more than just the couple of hundred miles typically covered in an intro and spend some real time on the road with said bike.